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Stephen Benjamin and Keara Watkins received Point Foundation scholarships this year. (Photos courtesy Point Foundation)
Atlanta gay scholars on 'Point' to become lawyers
Largest LGBT scholarship foundation provides money, support

By MATT SCHAFER
JUN. 27, 2008
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MATT SCHAFER

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Neither Keara Watkins nor Stephen Benjamin took the traditional route to college, but both have been rewarded for the perseverance with scholarships from the prestigious Point Foundation.

Watkins and Benjamin are among the 27 new college students supported by the Point Foundation, the largest gay scholarship organization in the country. Established in 2001, the Point Foundation awarded $6 million in seven years to gay college leaders.

Watkins came out as a lesbian to her family when she was 15 and faced physical abuse due to her disclosure. And Benjamin made headlines after he was booted from the military as an Arabic translator when supervisors discovered he was gay. Their experiences made them want to attend college to learn more and then help others like themselves.

“We always look for academic excellence, a commitment to leadership in the community as a whole … we also look for leadership in the LGBT community, and the last one is financial or emotional need,” Point Foundation Executive Director Jorge Valencia said.

Unlike some scholarships that are only used for tuition, Point’s awards are used for whatever the students need most.

“We see ourselves as that last level that comes in and completes what they need,” Valencia said. “If they get a scholarship to cover books, we might cover tuition, transportation, those sorts of things.”

STUDENTS OVERCOME

Watkins lived at home with her father, whose physical abuse reached a level where she had to move out while still in high school. And while her mother lived openly as a lesbian, she had a recurring drug addiction and was rarely in Watkins’ life.

For Watkins to transition from an abusive household in Virginia to the halls of Atlanta’s Spelman College, she needed the emotional and financial support the foundation offered.

 “Over spring break I was visiting my father, who I don’t see very often, and I was showing him small little souvenirs to let him know what is going on with my life now. One of the things I showed him was my application to the Point Scholarship,” she said.

Watkins said when he saw it was a gay organization, he flew into a rage. “My father has always been abusive, but it wasn’t about me for once. It was a larger view of all this, that it’s not just me.”

Once he stopped choking her, she said, she told him, “You’re ridiculous and I pity you.”

As a result of her father’s abuse and meeting an attorney while in high school, she decided to pursue a career in law and is a double major in Spanish and Comparative Woman’s Studies.

“I want to go to law school. I want to become an attorney for LGBT, women and African-American civil rights, or international law,” Watkins said.

Benjamin is also a pre-law student and is waiting for final acceptance to Emory University, where he plans to study political science. At 25, Benjamin is far from the typical college student. He served a stint in the Navy as an Arabic translator before being discharged after text messages on a government computer made passing references that identified him as gay.

His leadership in lobbying against the United State’s Armed Forces policy of “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” was one of the defining factors behind the Point Foundation backing him.

Benjamin isn’t sure where he will end up when he’s finished with law school.

“It is an incredibly vast field and I really don’t know [what I want to do],” he said. “I imagine that after I get out of law school I’ll probably have a fairly good amount of debt so I’ll probably go work for a corporate firm for a few years. After that I think I might want to work in family law or potentially Lambda Legal, that would be ideal.”





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